Aflojar in english

Loosen up

pronunciation: lusənʌp part of speech: verb
In gestures

aflojarse = come + unstuck ; come + loose. 

Example: If you are using the patch and it does come unstuck, try to stick it back on in the same area of the body.Example: It appeared that the digger came loose on the trailer and fell onto the stone wall.

aflojar = loosen ; slacken (off) ; remit ; dish out ; let up ; slack (off). 

Example: Reader use, exhibitions and reproductions, age, pigment damages, and the dry air caused by the radiators, often cause the layer of pigment in the miniatures of old manuscripts to loosen or flake off.Example: The trend direct supply of books to schools shows no sign of slackening.Example: The fever was resolved and the skin lesions started to remit during the following 3 weeks.Example: Seattle police had to dish out $8000 after wrongful arrest of a photographer.Example: We can't let up on that just because these are tough times and he's had a very successful campaign.Example: On March 22, the storm began to slack off, and the party prepared to push off in the morning.

more:

» aflojar el pasoslow downslow uppump + the brakestake + Posesivo + foot off the gas .

Example: However, the flight from DC appears to have slowed down more quickly than was anticipated, and we no longer read of large numbers of libraries making the change.

Example: Since cataloging is the most time consuming part of digitization, it has slowed up the placement of files.

Example: The couple had plans to get married this summer, but now, they've decided to pump the brakes on their wedding!.

Example: Chelsea took their foot off the gas during times in the second half but switched on and decided to go for the kill with 15 minutes remaining.

» aflojar la guitacough up + moneyshell out + moneyshell outcough up + cashstump upshell out + cash .

Example: They are not going to cough up additional money to pay for these rate increases.

Example: I don't think the Council on Library Resources is of any mind to go shelling out money for ten years the way it did before.

Example: And when men are the spenders, they typically shell out more than wives do -- about 40 percent more.

Example: Most donors won't respond to queries about why they coughed up cash; others say their companies have given out of civic pride.

Example: Spain has become the latest European nation to stump up billions in public cash to bail out car firms bludgeoned by the economic crisis.

Example: Unlike other kinds of campaigns, charitable campaigns ask for us to do more than shell out our cash for a good or service -- we're donating money to better the world we live in.

» aflojar la marchaslow downslow uppump + the brakestake + Posesivo + foot off the gas .

Example: However, the flight from DC appears to have slowed down more quickly than was anticipated, and we no longer read of large numbers of libraries making the change.

Example: Since cataloging is the most time consuming part of digitization, it has slowed up the placement of files.

Example: The couple had plans to get married this summer, but now, they've decided to pump the brakes on their wedding!.

Example: Chelsea took their foot off the gas during times in the second half but switched on and decided to go for the kill with 15 minutes remaining.

» aflojarsecome + unstuckcome + loose .

Example: If you are using the patch and it does come unstuck, try to stick it back on in the same area of the body.

Example: It appeared that the digger came loose on the trailer and fell onto the stone wall.

» tira y aflojatussletug of wargive and takehorse-trading .

Example: A nosy octopus nearly got away with a scuba diver's camera in an underwater tussle that lasted a few tense minutes.

Example: Library administrators might be able to predict their fortunes in the academic tug of war for funds if they understood more clearly the attitudes of institutional administrators towards libraries.

Example: Another point which we hope these introductory remarks make clear is that AACR2, even more than the 1967 version, is the result of give and take, of compromise, of negotiation, of concessions made graciously or grudgingly.

Example: Whenever a government falls, a lot of horse-trading goes on before another government is formed.
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